Lao Language

Lao (ພາສາລາວ phaasaa laao) is the official language of Laos. It is a tonal language of the Tai family, and is closely related to the language of the north-eastern Isan region of Thailand. The writing system of Lao is an abugida and is closely related to the writing system used in Thai. Lao language can be divided into five main dialects : Vientiane Lao is widely understood throughout the country.

Tones

Vientiane Lao has six tones: Low, Mid, High, Rising, High and Low Falling. Pitch levels vary from the speaker's ethnicity and geographic location. Luang Prabang residents use five tones: Mid Falling Rising, Low Rising, Mid, High Falling and Mid Rising.

Script

The Lao alphabet is based on the same script as the Thai alphabet. It made its way into Laos from Sinhalese and Khmer Buddhists during the reign of Laos' first King. It is made up of 33 consonants and 28 vowels representing respectively 21 and 27 original sounds, written from left to right. It is much simpler and thus easier to learn than its Thai, Khmer, and Burmese counterparts. Lao words are written phonetically using this script.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
list of statisticians
wyandot
list of fictional battles
sviatoslav richter
hodgkin's disease
sufficiency (statistics)
richard helms
the sugarcubes
list of hip hop musicians
electron positron annihilation
pair production
3rd bass
demographics of wrttemberg
duplicating machines
edgar bergen
six dynasties
quark (television)
velvet
pern
dragonriders of pern
eraillure
lake tahoe
lithic flake
bulb of applied force
j. jonah jameson
njl's saga
history of wrttemberg
updates (rush limbaugh)
larry holmes
jack webb
alfred aho
porter (carrying)
porter
1990s in film
fulling
fowl
onager
cai lun
air new zealand
mighty blackpool
rotavirus
brothers quay
laurie anderson
hms st albans